Auctioneer does nonprofits’ bidding

May 24th, 2008

Auctioneer does nonprofits’ bidding
By Muhammed El-Hasan Staff Writer
Article Launched: 05/11/2008 08:06:56 PM PDT

Auctioneer Jim Moore of Rolling Hills Estates works the audience to hike the bidding up during a school fundraiser at the Comedy and Magic Club in Hermosa Beach
Growing up in Kentucky, Jim Moore was fascinated by the auctioneers he saw at auctions of cattle, tobacco and farm implements.

After such events, Moore would still hear the auctioneers’ rapid-fire cadence like a song you can’t get out of your head. He would try to mimic them at home or in the shower.

When Moore grew up, he worked various jobs, including publicist, actor and journalist, and now teaches horsemanship.

But the Rolling Hills Estates resident never lost his love for the auction.

About a decade ago, Moore was at a charity auction, with little participation from the attendees.

“I said, `Can I try it?’ and they said go ahead,” recalled Moore, 52. “So I started doing it, and everybody started paying attention.”

Today, Moore serves as a part-time auctioneer for nonprofit groups seeking to raise funds.

How do you set yourself apart from other auctioneers?

My Southern twang helps with the auctioneering. It adds a little bit of a different sound and cadence. Most people aren’t familiar with it. You have a lot of celebrities doing auctioneering, but they don’t sound like me.

What do you wear at auctions?

I always go cowboy. And I always get there early enough to work the room. I want to find out what people are interested in. I find out who the bidders are.

How often do you serve as an auctioneer?

I probably do one or two a month.

What’s the most expensive item you’ve auctioned off?

I recently sold a parking spot for Peninsula Heritage School in Rolling Hills Estates. Somebody bought a parking spot for $20,000. I think that’s got to be the ultimate.

What else have you auctioned off?

Two tickets to the Oprah Winfrey Show taping in Chicago. It did not include airfare, and I sold it for $15,000. I’ve auctioned off trips to Italy, trail rides. Whatever the organizer can get as donations for charity is what I auction off.

How many items do you auction off at an event?

I’ve auctioned off up to 10 to 15 items. That’s about the limit of the audience’s attention span.

How long does it take to auction off one item?

Three to five to 10 minutes, depending on the enthusiasm of the crowd.

What’s the hardest item to auction off?

Trips are often the most difficult. There’s a window of when you can use the tickets and sometimes it doesn’t fit into people’s schedules.

What’s the best part of your job?

Making ‘em laugh. If there’s kids in the audience, I get the kids onstage and try to get them to do the auction as fast as they can. If there’s a celebrity, I try to get them on stage and mimic me, and invariably they can’t and it gets a laugh.

What’s the worst part of your job?

When people are not interested in bidding. That’s just like pulling teeth.

How much do you charge per auction?

Anywhere from $600 to $2,000 a night, depending on the event. Plus I like for them to feed me.

What’s the best meal you’ve had at an auction?

It was downtown L.A. It was all nice fillet. I’m a meat and potatoes guy.

Do you get hoarse from auctioneering?

Sometimes I do. I have a big booming voice and a microphone, but by the end of the night it gets pretty strained. But a couple shots of tequila and I’m OK.

muhammed.el-hasan@dailybreeze.com

FIND OUT MORE

Jim Moore

310-377-8834

Popularity: 46% [?]

What Auctioneers are saying about Global Auction Guide

May 23rd, 2008

Steffes Auctioneers has been associated with Farm Auction Guide and Dwayne Leslie since 2001. It has been a pleasure working with Dwayne and being part of the exciting internet technology growth in the auction industry. We took “baby steps” in the beginning until we saw how the national and international exposure on Farm Auction Guide was making the phone ring. We now use the many innovations and statistics provided to us as a selling tool for future clients and as a confirmation of our commitment to service for our current clients. We appreciate the service Global Auction Guide offers us and look forward to a continued relationship in the years to come.

Geri Paul , Steffes Auctioneers Fargo, North Dakota

Popularity: 47% [?]

Going once, going twice…

May 22nd, 2008

May 11, 2008 ( Stillwater NewsPress - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) — – Hurry, hurry, hurry.

Ever wonder how many times auctioneer and Real Estate broker, Tom D. Berry, has said those words?

“I have conducted or participated in over 2,000 auctions,” said Berry, who has been in the business since 1970. “I like to sell anything of value. My definition of a good auction is having a satisfied seller and a satisfied buyer. It’s real simple.”

Something not quite so simple is mastering the art of the auctioneer chant. In an English-style auction, with ascending bids, many auctioneers go to auctioneering school to learn how to speak fast, but not too fast.

“Everybody’s got a different style,” said Berry, who was trained by a mentor auctioneer. “I’ve simply practiced a lot and had many hours of experience.”

Different types of auctions usually result in different styles from auctioneers. Cattle auctions are more customary, with quick speaking, while real estate auctions are a little slower.

“You want to talk the numbers rather than words,” Berry said. “Without the chant, an auction would be a very boring event. It’s good entertainment.”

Not only can auctions provide good, free entertainment, but they are also becoming more competitive. When Berry started in the business, auctions were more of a novelty event than anything else, he said.

Over the years, however, it has become a “more accepted method of marketing.” The Internet and Web casting has elevated the industry into unprecedented numbers.

More and more people are turning to auctions to sell everything from real estate, including farms and ranches, to farm equipment, antiques or anything of value, said the Oklahoma State University graduate with a political science degree.

Originally planning to attend law school after graduating from OSU, Berry’s plans changed when the Vietnam War began.

While he never served time in Vietnam, Berry served in the infantry and was stationed on the Monterey peninsula in California.

After viewing the beautiful real estate in that region, Berry convinced himself to go into the business and skip law school. That decision has led Berry to a lifetime of enjoyment.

“I love to do it,” Berry said. “I like people. I enjoy the action of the auctions. It’s satisfying to see people buy something that they can use over a number of years.”

Berry will be back in action on May 17 at 401 S. Willis Road in Stillwater. He can be reached at (405) 372-2466 or by e-mail at tomdberry@berryauctions.com.

Berry has a Web site at www.berryauctions.com, and an office at 614 S. Main St. in Stillwater.

Popularity: 48% [?]

Auction Marketing Network

May 21st, 2008

MarkNet Alliance member companies have achieved a new milestone with more than 300 auctions in 26 states currently active.

No other member-based company in the auction industry has reached this milestone. These auctions include everything from land, residential real estate and commercial real estate, to personal property and niche markets. Hundreds of these are online auctions that use MarkNet’s proprietary Streamline Bid software.

“This is a tremendous achievement for our group of companies,” said Matt Corso, MarkNet Alliance Operations Officer. “The members of MarkNet Alliance are really working hard at growing their businesses and staying on the leading edge of the industry. We are very grateful to be partnered with each of our member companies and we will continue to work hard to help them achieve even greater accomplishments with their businesses.”

About MarkNet Alliance:

MarkNet Alliance is a national membership-based network of auction companies. MarkNet companies are already successful auction professionals with proven track records and thriving businesses. MarkNet allows companies to grow their existing businesses through technology, networking and educational training. MarkNet never asks a member company to give up their local identity, but instead partners with the company to help it grow.

MarkNet Alliance tools allow member companies to be more efficient, have a broader depth of expertise and help serve their clients with a more complete and well rounded service than ever before. MarkNet’s revolutionary software allows members to cooperate with other member auctioneers across the country and manage the process from their home office.

To view the variety of current auctions and to find out more about MarkNet Alliance and its member companies please visit www.marknetalliance.com. You can also contact Matt Corso or Wendy Stewart at 1-888-307-6545.

Popularity: 55% [?]

Internet Marketing for Auction Sales Part 2

May 20th, 2008

Here is a followup to our Part 1 in this series

National aggregate websites
Anyone who is serious about getting the full benefits of using the Internet knows that there are national auction advertising websites who specialize in getting your upcoming auction listing in front of as many potential bidders as possible. Bidders and collectors may be quite interested in items at one of your upcoming sales, but only if they know about it. Bidders 50 miles down the road may not have ever heard of your company, may not read the same newspapers you advertise in and are out of range of any radio advertising you may do. But they may watch the listings for their home state on a national auction website. Most importantly, they may SEARCH for a specific item they are interested in or have an email alert set for that search term so that they are immediately alerted when you add that sale.

Auctioneers know that since the Internet became popular, they can never underestimate the tenacity of a collector to travel across long distances for the opportunity to bid on a single specific item. If an auctioneer is planning to do even 1 sale a year using live online bidding, they should be taking every advantage to advertise outside their local area with every service possible.

The added benefit to an individual sales bottom line from one extra bidder can easily pay for an auctioneers entire Internet advertising budget for the year.

These websites have such credibility with the search engines such as Google, Yahoo, and MSN that they can get your name and upcoming sale into the 1st page of results usually within a few days. Just having your own website linked to from these high credibility websites will help your own website show higher.

The largest and most effective of the national services are AuctionZip.com and GlobalAuctionGuide.com . These sites have 2 distinct business models and target bidders in completely different ways , so they are both very worthwhile to advertise with.

AuctionZip.com is the largest auction website on the Internet with thousands of auctioneers posting sales for free. They are very strong in the eastern part of the United States and have a great following of bidders.

GlobalAuctionGuide.com is the largest network of auction advertising websites on the Internet with over 50 websites carrying auction content for as little as one dollar a day. These include many newspaper, radio networks and niche websites, and are especially strong in the Midwest and in certain industry segments.

Central Auction Hub
The Central Auction Hub is an industry initiative to help auctioneers get the most of their Internet advertising without spending days doing it. The ability to add your information to one website in a few minutes and forward it to multiple other websites in one click is the next level of service offered to auctioneers.
This allows the auctioneer to add/edit their text and photos at any participating website without needing any special computer knowledge. They can then have their information show on their own website, their national websites, their state association websites and many other auction advertising websites.

As mentioned in the title of this Blog Series, this is part of how to get 30,772 pageviews of your next upcoming auction sale.

Text / Photos / PDF’s

Bidders are using the Internet in more sophisticated ways every day. They are looking across larger areas for specific items and especially want more detailed information about these items. An auctioneer who simply posts a date and location is losing out immensely on potential bidders .

The attached pie graph courtesy GlobalAuctionGuide.Com shows how nearly half of their users are searching for specific items in their database.

Global usage piechart

If you only post the basic details of a sale trying to get bidders to click on a link to go back to another site for details, you can see how you are missing out on a large amount of traffic.

Time
The ability to have an upcoming sale advertised for the longest period possible is one of the most important tricks to having a successful sale. Many auctions in Western Canada are posted in October for a sale date the following April. You can see how this will give the auctioneer the maximum exposure to browsers and searchers. This length of time also gives high ranking for your sale in general search engines such as Google.

While 6 months is not the usual timeframe for most auctioneers, the shorter the timeframe the more important it is to get the information online as soon as possible.

A trick of the most successful auctioneers is to sign a contract in the morning, post the basic information by lunchtime. Add photos and then type out their salebill and have it posted by 5 PM.

The client will be very impressed to see their entire auction professionally posted and advertised the same day.

The more details, the more text, the more photos, the more pageviews, the more bidders, the more time, the more websites = a better bottom line.

Popularity: 39% [?]

SNOWY “FIFTH AVE” TAKES THE LEAD IN WEST PALM BEACH FINE ART AND ANTIQUES SALE

May 17th, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 10, 2008

AUCTION GALLERY OF THE PALM BEACHES
Sale February 25, 2008
West Palm Beach, FL

The painting by American Guy Wiggins was the top lot at Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches at $28,080.

A Vero Beach estate provided plenty of action for the 555 registered bidders who participated in the February 25 sale at Auction Gallery of the Palm Beaches in West Palm Beach, FL. The sale attracted an unusually high amount of online activity through LiveAuctioneers.com because of the quality and volume of the inventory according to Auction owner Brian Kogan. The 100 inhouse registered bidders were joined by 455 who signed up though LiveAuctioneers.com along with 80 phone and absentee bidders. Overall 25 percent of the 372 lot inventory was won by online bidders.

Art led the way to the top lot in the form of an oil on canvas board, 16 by 20in, from American painter Guy Carleton Wiggins (1883-1962). His Impressionist painting of an urban snow scene entitled “Fifth Ave” sold to a local collector in the room for $28,080 including the buyer’s premium (est $20,000/$30,000). Following close behind was an original painting in acrylic and ink by Joan Miro (Spanish 1893-1983) which was included in the book “MIRO LITHOGRAPHS II,” preface by Raymond Gueneau, Leon Amiel publisher, New York 1975. The signed work and the copy of the book sold in the room for $24,750. A 17½in diameter disk, bronze with verdigris patina, signed by Alexander Archipenko (American 1881-1964) featuring Russian peasant figures was a protest work inscribed with a Ukranian poem referring to Stalin. Estimated at $10,000/$15,000, it sold on the floor for $23,400.

Other works of art included an oil on canvas in the manner of Jean Marc Nattier (French 1685-1766). “Mother and Child with Dog” was a 49¼ by 38in 19th century paining in a gilded frame. Estimated at $2,000/$3,000, it closed at $8,482 and a Spanish School oil on canvas, “Portrait of an Officer,” circa 1800, estimated at $1,000-$1,500, it was hammered down to an Internet bidder for $6,710.

Both period and reproduction furniture was strong. A set of four walnut George III Irish Chippendale chairs had some old restorations but generally were in very good condition. They found a new home with a floor bidder for $16,380 (est $6,000/$8,000). Need a table for those chairs? Along came a George III mahogany triple pedestal dining table with a satinwood crossbanded top, oval ends and vase shape standards raised on downswept reeded legs ending in brass caps and castors, circa 1800. The 89in by 41in table with two 20¾in extension leaves closed at $8,190 (est $4,000/$6,000). A George III style mahogany tall case clock, American circa 1880 with a movement stamped twice “Walter Durfee, Providence R .I.,” a hood with broken pediment and a dial signed by Henry A. Turner & Co, Boston, estimated at $5,000/$8,000, sold for $9,360.

Louis XVI 20th century reproductions were popular. A French Louis XVI style bureau plat with gilt bronze mounts and frieze brought $2,808, well above the $1,200/$1,600 estimate. A French Louis XVI chest, circa 1900, with four long drawers raised on short circular legs sold for $2,574 (est $500/$700) and a French Louis XVI gilt bronze mounted mahogany game table, circa 1910, 44½ by 25¼in, went for $2,223 (est $800/$1,200).

Fancy lighting was in heavy demand. A pair of Empire style gilt and patinated bronze figural six light candelabra, French 19th century, each cast as a semi-nude Grecian female holding aloft a vase issuing candle arms, 39¾in high, raised on a gilt marble mounted plinth, estimated at $3,000/$5,000, had extremely heavy phone bidding but sold in the room for $11,700. A rare pair of George III cut glass two light sconces, English circa 1775, with a provenance from Shreve, Crump & Low of Boston, roared over the estimate of $500/$800 to close at $4,914.

For more information about this sale and upcoming sales including the Chess Collectors International chess sale in May call (561) 805-7115, email info@agopb.com or visit the website at http://www.agopb.com. The Gallery is located at 1609 South Dixie Hwy, Suite 5, West Palm Beach, Florida 33401.

Written by:
Fred Taylor
http://www.furnituredetective.com/
800-387-6377

PHOTO CAPTIONS FOR AUCTION GALLERY OF THE PALM BEACHES

This 16 by 20in oil on canvas board by Guy C. Wiggins was top lot at
$28,080.

This bronze disk entitled “Ukraine 1931” was signed by Alexander
Archipneko. It closed above estimate at $23,400.


An acrylic and ink work by Joan Miro brought $24,750.

A pair of George III walnut Iris Chippendale chairs in good condition doubled
the $6,000/$8,000 estimate to close at $16,380.

This magnificent pair of 19th century French Empire style candelabra
soared over estimate closing at $11,300.

This fine pair of William IV English Sheffield coasters was made by K.G. &
Co in 1834. Estimated at $800/$1,200, they sold online for $2,928.

Popularity: 41% [?]

Video Friday ! Chant of a Champion DVD Clip 2

May 16th, 2008

Popularity: 39% [?]

Newspaper Association: Worst Print Ad Slide Ever Measured; Online Up 19 Percent

May 15th, 2008

This is huge  !

From the Paid Content Blog

By Joseph Weisenthal - Fri 28 Mar 2008 11:42 AM PST

Newspaper publishers might hope there’s some truth to the old line about it being darkest before the dawn. A new report from the Newspaper Association of America says the newspaper print ad downturn in 2007 was the worst it had seen in more than 50 years of measuring the numbers. Total revenue for the industry fell 7.9 percent to $45.3 billion, with print revenue falling by 9.4 percent to $42 billion. The previous worst was during the recession of 2001 (online ads weren’t being measured). Prior to that, the worst was a 6 percent slide during the recession of 1991. Of course, the industry is getting hit with a double whammy: secular industry shifts, and the effects of a sorry economy, which has decimated core revenue bases like housing, employment and auto ads. Full data. (via E&P)

The online picture is brighter, with revenue growing by 19 percent for the year. But the cloud behind that silver lining is that digital still accounts for just 7.5 percent of the total. And in many instances, as we’ve seen, digital growth is well below the industry total. Release.

Popularity: 39% [?]

MOSER, GALLE’, BACCARAT, STEUBEN AND TIFFANY ART GLASS, ALONG WITH WATERFORD CRYSTAL TEAM UP WITH GORHAM, FISHER, WALLACE & TIFFANY STERLING

May 13th, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 8, 2008

PROFESSIONAL APPRAISERS & LIQUIDATORS
Crystal River, FL
Sale March 29-30, 2008

Name dropping art treasures from the estate of Dr. Charles William Inman of Lakeland will dominate the March 29-30 sale in Crystal River, FL of more than 1,000 lots. ABSOLUTE SALE! NO RESERVES!

The estate of Dr. Inman has chosen a pair of veteran Florida auctioneers, Charlie Fudge of Crystal River, FL, owner of Professional Appraisers & Liquidators and Kale Albritton of Lakeland, FL, to facilitate the sale of Dr. Inman’s fabulous collection of art glass, silver, fine art, music boxes and antiques. Albritton, who knew Dr. Inman for over thirty years, said “Dr. Inman was very much an astute collector. He was a student of the subject – a collector with a method.”

Added to the 700 items from the Inman estate will be 300 more quality lots from various estates with names like Doulton, Limoges, R.S. Prussia, Fenton, Fulper and Northwood plus antique German dolls, works by listed artists, gold and silver coins and estate jewelry as well as paintings by 19th and 20th century listed artists.

More than twenty art glass lots bear signatures of L. C. Tiffany, LCT and Tiffany Studios and include a Cypriote Spot vase, Favrile vases including a special order green cased vase with pulled leaf and vine decoration, a rare blue Jack in the Pulpit vase, a Favrile compote, a Favrile Aurene bowl and many more. There are over fifty pieces of signed Steuben glass (some signed by the master, F. Carder) including bowls, art glass shades with fleur de lis signature, vases, a dresser jar, a flower frog and twenty three pieces of Selenium Red. There are Moser works with the Karlsbad signature, several pieces of signed Emile Galle’ cameo glass vases, over twenty-five pieces signed R. Lalique or Rene’ Lalique, Baccarat paperweights, Swarovski crystal including animals, cars and a train, over seventy-five pieces of Waterford crystal including a chandelier, lamps, bowls, plates and stemware and many pieces of American Brilliant Period cut glass signed by T. G. Hawkes, J. Hoare and Sinclair.

Artwork will include an oil on board by A.Y. (Alexander Young) Jackson (Canadian 1882-1974). Jackson was an Impressionist painter who belonged to the Group of Seven, a band of Canadian artists who painted native landscapes. There also will be an Impressionist landscape by A. Paul Madeline (French 1863-1920) plus works by D. R. Sellars, Ernest Fredericks (American 1877-1927), a great Florida scene by original Florida Highwayman Robert Butler and many more important 19th and 20th century paintings.

A large selection of sterling silver, over seventy-five pieces, will cross the block. Among them are a Fisher sterling five piece tea set, a Tiffany sterling tea set, Tiffany three-handled loving cups, Gorham three-handled cups and a 73 piece flatware service in Strasbourg pattern as well as a number of sterling silver trays, pitchers, compotes, bowls, serving pieces and sterling silver plateau with applied grape and vine.

One of the estates has over seventy-five three handled items, including the ones mentioned above by Tiffany and Gorham but also including items from Doulton Lambeth, Lenox (with silver repousse’ top), Limoges, Fulper, several Moser pieces, Henry Kohn and Sons (sterling cup) as well as a sterling cup with three handles made of stag horn marked “Made for Tiffany”.

This outstanding opportunity, noted by Fudge to be “The biggest one I have ever done in my thirty five years in the business,” will be presented as an absolute auction with no reserves. The sale will be held at the facility of Professional Appraisers & Liquidators beginning Saturday March 29 at 1:00PM and will continue Sunday at 1:00PM. Preview is Friday March 28 from 1:00PM – 6:00PM and Saturday and Sunday 10:00AM – 1:00PM. Both sessions of the sale will be carried live online by Proxibid. Professional Appraisers & Liquidators is located at 811 SE Highway 19, Crystal River, FL, 34429. Absentee and phone bids are welcomed. Reserve seating is available on a first come, first served basis by reservation by phone. For more information contact the auction at (352) 795-2061, (800) 542-3877, email to webuyit@tampabay.rr.com or visit the website at www.charliefudge.com.
Written by:
Fred Taylor
http://www.furnituredetective.com/
800-387-6377


PHOTO CAPTIONS FOR PROFESSIONAL APPRAISERS

Oil on Artist Board Painting by A.Y. Jackson (Alexander Young 1882-1974). 8’ X 10’ oil on artist board depicting single lone tree on hillside, signed Lower Right A.Y. Jackson in gilt mold frame of the period - Estimate: $10,000 to $15,000


L.C. Tiffany Favrile Vase. Special Order Green Cased Favrile with Pulled Leaf & Vine Decoration, 11 1/2 “ high, signed – Estimate: $6,000 to $8,000


L. C. Tiffany Favrile Cypriote Vase. 4 ½” h X 7 ½” w decorated with Cypriote spots and applied threading on purple ground, signed L.C.T. 017451 – Estimate: $8,000 to $10,000

Moser, Karlsbad Marqueterie Sur-Verre Vase – Auction Estimate: $2,000 to $4,000

19th Century Cylinder Music Box by A. Jaccard du Grand Swiss Orchestra Bell & Drum Cylinder with Enameled Butterfly and Bee Strikers. Forte-piccolo Tambone Timbres, measures 31 ½ X 10 ¾ X 14 ¾. A ten-tune box with floral inlay to top and front. Excellent working condition - Estimate: $5,000 to 7,500

Tiffany Studios Desk/Harp Lamp with dark brown and green patina having a gold aurene shade, 18 ¾” h X 9” w, stamped Tiffany Studios New York 424 – Estimate $2,000 to $4,000

Popularity: 44% [?]

PAIR OF ORIGINAL CHARLES SCHULZ “PEANUTS” STRIPS TOP $100,000, AND ORIGINAL X-MEN #99 COVER ART FETCHES $55,370 AT PHILIP WEISS AUCTIONS’ APRIL 26th SALE

May 12th, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Philip Weiss
(516) 594-0731

PAIR OF ORIGINAL CHARLES SCHULZ “PEANUTS” STRIPS TOP $100,000, AND ORIGINAL X-MEN #99 COVER ART FETCHES $55,370 AT PHILIP WEISS AUCTIONS’ APRIL 26th SALE

(Oceanside, N.Y.) - A pair of original Charles Schulz “Peanuts” comic strips – one daily, one Sunday – sold for a combined $106,270, and original cover art by Dave Cockrum for the “X-Men” #99 comic book hit $55,370 at a multi-estate sale held April 26 by Philip Weiss Auctions. The Dave Cockrum piece was the top lot in a sale that saw about 750 items change hands and grossed $500,000.

“I know I sound like a broken record, but even in a sour economy if you offer top-quality, fresh-to-the-market merchandise, then people will come to your auctions and people will spend their money,” said Philip Weiss, “and that’s exactly what happened at this sale. Attendance was somewhat light at right around 50 in-house bidders, but Internet, phone and absentee bidding was very strong.”

Mr. Weiss said the online bidding component (via eBayLive and LiveAuctioneers.com) was particularly active, with about 4,000 registered Internet bidders comprising the vast bulk of the nearly 6,000 total bids submitted during the sale. “But the phones were ringing all day, too, for almost every lot,” he added, “and the absentee bids included 1,500 ‘left’ bids. It was just a great day overall.”

The “Peanuts” strips sold for similar amounts, even though the Sunday was 13 panels and the daily was only four. But the daily (signed by Schulz and dated 6-27-57) featured an early Snoopy in all four panels, plus Charlie Brown in the last panel. It sold for $52,110. The Sunday strip, dated 4-8-62, had a great baseball gag featuring Linus and Snoopy. After spirited bidding, it went for $54,160.

The Cockrum “X-Men” cover art was one of the noted illustrator’s finest efforts, a pen-and-ink drawing of an intergalactic battle scene in outer space. The piece – measuring 11-1/2” x 17-1/2” — was signed in the lower right by the artist. It was executed in 1976. Also, a lot of 21 original Spiderman sketches by John Romita, all from the 1960s and accompanied by a trace splash page, realized $27,120.

Following are additional sale highlights. All prices quoted include a 13% buyer’s premium.

Comic books were a hot commodity. A copy of “Journey Into Mystery” (#83), graded 6.5 and introducing the Mighty Thor (dated 8-13-62), hammered for $3,730; a giant-size (68-page) copy of “X-Men” (#1), graded 9.6 and featuring all the X-Men superheroes on the cover (Summer 1975), made $2,710; and a rare copy of “Sub-Mariner” (#32) from July 1949, graded 7.5, changed hands for $4,065.

A fabulous Apollo 11 Flight Plan, personally signed on the cover by 21 NASA astronauts for “Arlene” (who worked as a NASA hostess and entertained astronauts and their families in her home near Houston in the 1960s) blasted off for $8,190. The Flight Plan, housed in a three-ring binder, had the signatures of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldren and Michael Collins (all of Apollo 11) and many others.

Animation art was led by a marvelous production cel from the classic 1930s Disney movie “Snow White,” depicting a wide-eyed Snow White and a rabbit on a Courvoisier background. The cel, framed and measuring 5” x 6-1/4”, achieved $4,802. Also, a complete, unused ticket to the Beatles’ concert at Shea Stadium in New York, dated August 23, 1966 (face value: $5.75), gaveled for $1,648.

Philip Weiss Auctions’ next big sale will be held on Saturday, May 17. It will be Part 2 of The Newport Stamp Collection. Part 1 made headlines when, on February 9, an unused 1869 24-cent inverted center U.S. stamp, #120b, certified Fine and one of only four unused examples know to exist, soared to $1.271 million. It was a new world record for a U.S. invert (the previous record: $825,000).

Part 2 of the sale promises to be just as enticing for collectors. Highlights will include U.S. singles and great rarities such as August issues #55-62; Continental and American special printings, complete #’s 167-177, 180-181, 192-204, 205C, 211D and J8-J14; 1857 and 1861 reprints, complete #’s 233A and 314A mint pair (Ex. Cromwell and Engle, one of only six such pairs known to exist). Also:

316 line pair; 318 pair; 321 pair; 322 pair; 356 line pair; an Orangeburg Coil used single; 4C and 8C blue papers; 485 double error; 544 used; 594 mint; 596 pre-cancelled; O94; PR47; R157 and R158; Hawaii #12; and many more. To learn more about the second component of this fabulous collection, click on the Philip Weiss Auctions website as sale day approaches: www.prwauctions.com.

Also on May 17, 200 other stamp, coin and paper money lots will also be sold from various collections, to include: The Chesapeake Collection featuring 50+ Scott specialty albums loaded with foreign mint sets and singles; British Colonies; four stamp collections now being broken down; and the “Silver Salt Cellar” recovered from the treasure ship Atocha (appraised value: more than $300,000).

The following day, Sunday, May 18, another blockbuster sale will be held, featuring about 200 lots of Civil War photos, ribbons, letters and many identified carte de vistes (CDVs); a collection of Jack London first-edition books and other important first-editions; 150-200 lots of better Americana, literature and illustrated books; three Charles Schulz “Peanuts” strips; and two Kentucky Long Rifles.

May 18 will also feature sports memorabilia, to include a signed Babe Ruth photograph; examples of the rare and coveted T-206 baseball cards; and more. Also slated to cross the block will be a collection of rare Russian propaganda posters from the 1930s; movie posters; post cards; and more. Check the website for more lot listings as the May dates approach. Click on www.prwauctions.com.

Looking a little further into the year, Philip Weiss Auctions also has sales planned for June and September (times and dates to be announced). Already secured for June is a beautiful, fresh-to-the-market oil-on-canvas painting by the Spanish artist Emilio Grau Sala (1911-1975). The September auction will feature a military collection that, according to Mr. Weiss, “must be seen to be believed.”

Philip Weiss Auctions conducts its sales in a spacious showroom facility, located at #1 Neil Court, In Oceanside, N.Y. (on Long Island). The firm is always accepting quality consignments for future sales. To consign an item, estate or collection, you may call them directly, at (516) 594-0731, or e-mail them at phil@prwauctions.com. To learn more about the firm, click on www.prwauctions.com.

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